Gulf News

‘THE GIRL IN THE SPIDER’S WEB’: A MIXED BAG

‘The Crown’ star Claire Foy channels 007 in the franchise that’s a bit empty

- By Benjamin Lee

We’re in the middle of a messy old time for franchises. Thirsty studios continue to fiddle with well-known properties in order to reboot, rehaul and resurrect, often enticing but also confusing audiences with the results. The latest iteration of Halloween took the liberty of scaring away the memory of prior sequels to bring Jamie Lee Curtis back from the dead; Amazon introduced the fifth actor to play Tom Clancy’s rather dull CIA operative Jack Ryan in the recent self-titled series; last month The Grinch returned in cartoon form; and in December, Sony launches an alternativ­e animated Spider-Man universe existing alongside their rebooted live-action series.

Which brings us, sighing from exhaustion, to The Girl in the Spider’s Web, a film that introduces us to the third Lisbeth Salander in eight years — and if Sony, the studio backing it, has its way, hopefully the last. Stieg Larsson’s best-selling Millennium series was first transplant­ed to the screen in 2009 with all three books adapted and released within months, introducin­g star Noomi Rapace to Hollywood. Just two years later, Sony lured David Fincher to an English-language take on the first novel, scoring Rooney Mara an Oscar nomination, and while box office results were decent, they weren’t quite decent enough to justify a $90 million (Dh330.51 million) budget.

It meant that despite interest from Mara a sequel fell through and instead a cheaper option came to fruition. With half the budget, Evil Dead remake director Fede Alvarez took the helm and rather than continue with the original planned trilogy, the fourth book was chosen, written by David Lagercrant­z long after Larsson’s death.

It might seem odd skipping from one to four but this so-called “soft-reboot” acts as a sort of origin tale with a plot that delves into the background of the notorious goth-hacker. Salander (played this time by The Crown’s Claire Foy) remains a vigilante at large in Stockholm, bringing down powerful men who take advantage of women. She’s also still a hacker-forhire and her latest job sees her tracking down a powerful programme that gives its owner the ability to take charge of nuclear weapons worldwide. It thrusts her into a dangerous underworld and forces her to confront her shadowy childhood, the memory of her abusive father and the sister she thought she’d left to die.

On paper, it might seem puzzling to drag Salander back to the screen yet again, but it’s clear from the first 15 minutes that Sony is hoping to position her as a female alternativ­e to James Bond. This might also seem puzzling to fans of the books, given that Salander’s stories have traditiona­lly been structured as page-turning mysteries, but The Girl in the

Spider’s Web is an unashamed attempt to bring in a wider audience at a time of increased female visibility in the action genre. It’s a sleek, efficientl­y made slab of entertainm­ent but one that borders on anonymity, Salander’s idiosyncra­sies buried underneath a more multiplex-friendly exterior, kicking and shooting her way to inevitable triumph.

Despite the shiny new packaging, there’s something unavoidabl­y dated about the story that unfolds. Salander’s hacking prowess is used for trickery that would have felt more impressive­ly novel if it had been employed in 1995 by Sandra Bullock’s character in The Net.

She’s also close to superhuman, setting traps and predicting outcomes in a way that a smarter, niftier script could have handled effortless­ly. But here it just feels impossible, psychic even, and such magical smarts jar with other dumber oversights made by her and ex-partner Mikael Blomkvist, played here by Sverrir Gudnason. His existence in the story is so superfluou­s he might as well be absent.

After breaking out with The Crown,

Foy has made a number of choices that suggest she’s all too aware of the danger of typecastin­g when playing a role of such magnitude. This year alone she’s played a woman questionin­g her sanity in Steven Soderbergh’s thriller Unsane and the frustrated wife of Neil Armstrong in Damien Chazelle’s First Man. In both films she rose far above the material she was given and it’s a skill that continues here.

But there’s only so much brooding she can do before we demand more, given how Salander was written with such loving detail on the page.

More female action heroes is by no means a bad thing but forcing Salander into Bond’s shoes feels like a misstep. The

Girl in the Spider’s Web is trapped in the wrong genre.

 ?? Photos courtesy of Sony Pictures Releasing ?? Claire Foy as Lisbeth Salander in ‘The Girl in the Spider’s Web’.
Photos courtesy of Sony Pictures Releasing Claire Foy as Lisbeth Salander in ‘The Girl in the Spider’s Web’.
 ??  ?? Sverrir Gudnason as Mikael Blomkvist.
Sverrir Gudnason as Mikael Blomkvist.

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